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Wednesday, January 7, 2015
CMEV concerned over possible military intervention in voting
January 7, 2015
Election watchdogs fear possible intervention by the military may disturb a peaceful voting process. The Center for Monitoring Election Violence (CMEV) stressed they are ‘seriously concerned’ about how the Army could or would influence the outcome of the election and voting on election day.
CMEV Co-Convener Dr. Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu said they are worried about a list going around with regard to various polling divisions in the country being divided up and responsibility for them being given to ex-service people. “What this exactly entails is our concern,” he noted, in an interview with the Daily FT.
Following are excerpts:
CMEV Co-Convener Dr. Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu said they are worried about a list going around with regard to various polling divisions in the country being divided up and responsibility for them being given to ex-service people. “What this exactly entails is our concern,” he noted, in an interview with the Daily FT.
Following are excerpts:
Q: We are just a day ahead of the 2015 presidential election. How would you describe the present situation?
A: This is a short campaign. Incidents of violence and consequences have not been that great as we had in previous campaigns. Nevertheless, there has been generalised violence. The known feature we have so far is the significant misuse of State resources by the incumbent.
We have had this type of elections in the past. But I think it’s more than a difference in degree; it is almost a difference in times. There is great disparity and imbalance in resources both State and otherwise that the incumbent’s campaign has in comparison to his opponent.
Then there is another factor, which is that the incidence of violence we had, we seen a lot of politicians at the local level from the ruling alliance being involved in them.
Our next consideration is that we are seriously concerned about how the Army could or would influence the outcome of the election and voting on election day. The Opposition too has stressed the seriousness of this matter. Of course there are particular concerns with regard to the north, but our fear is about the rest of the country. There is a list going around with regard to various polling divisions in the country being divided up and responsibility for them being given to ex-service people. What this exactly entails is our concern.
A: This is a short campaign. Incidents of violence and consequences have not been that great as we had in previous campaigns. Nevertheless, there has been generalised violence. The known feature we have so far is the significant misuse of State resources by the incumbent.

We have had this type of elections in the past. But I think it’s more than a difference in degree; it is almost a difference in times. There is great disparity and imbalance in resources both State and otherwise that the incumbent’s campaign has in comparison to his opponent.
Then there is another factor, which is that the incidence of violence we had, we seen a lot of politicians at the local level from the ruling alliance being involved in them.
Our next consideration is that we are seriously concerned about how the Army could or would influence the outcome of the election and voting on election day. The Opposition too has stressed the seriousness of this matter. Of course there are particular concerns with regard to the north, but our fear is about the rest of the country. There is a list going around with regard to various polling divisions in the country being divided up and responsibility for them being given to ex-service people. What this exactly entails is our concern.
Q: There were a number of shooting incidents, including one that targeted candidate Maithripala Sirisena. Two election officers were assaulted. How do you say there is less violence?
A: There have been less incidents of direct physical violence; this is due to the shorter campaign. The JVP is not involved. They are not putting up many posters, which is a very common site of violence.
There are incidents. I mean we had 300 odd incidents where over 150 are classified as major incidents of violence. So there has been violence, but not as great as may have been expected or feared in comparison to previous elections.
Violence, threat and intimidations being practiced is almost predominately, not exclusively, from the ruling coalition. This is why there is the whole argument about governance breakdown of institutions.
A: There have been less incidents of direct physical violence; this is due to the shorter campaign. The JVP is not involved. They are not putting up many posters, which is a very common site of violence.
There are incidents. I mean we had 300 odd incidents where over 150 are classified as major incidents of violence. So there has been violence, but not as great as may have been expected or feared in comparison to previous elections.
Violence, threat and intimidations being practiced is almost predominately, not exclusively, from the ruling coalition. This is why there is the whole argument about governance breakdown of institutions.
Q: Do you feel the situation will aggravate and there will be post-election violence?
A: There is possibility. Traditionally in elections in the past what we have seen is that in the intersegment between the end of campaign and polling day, there is space for high incidence of violence. On the polling day, polling agents and counting agents are targeted, polling cards are slashed and similar incidents could occur. Certainly there could be more incidents in the days to come.
Q: As observers, what measures can you take to ensure a violence-free election?
A: We are not the Police. We are not the Judiciary. What we can do is find out and publicise incidents of violence. Hopefully the media will carry it. At the end of the day it is the voters who have to decide. In order to make an important choice, they have to be informed. Therefore, our duty is to keep the people informed.
Q: There is fear that this might end up worse than the infamous Wayamba election. Your comments?
A: Well I hope and pray that it will not be the case. CMEV has been urging the Election Commissioner and officers responsible in holding the elections to try to prevent such incidents on election day so that things will not be as bad as they were during the Wayamba election.
Q: You mentioned possible military intervention to disturb voting. Do you believe as election monitors you have taken your best effort to prevent this situation?
A: At the end of the day, that’s the question people ask. Like I said before, what we can do is find out about incidents of violence and then release it to the media. At the moment all information we receive is put up on Twitter and Facebook. We give the information we get to the Election Commissioner and the Police Department. We do try to put our best effort to reduce the number of incidents and then ensure a violence-free election.
Q: Any truth to the claims made by State media that the Center for Policy Alternatives (CPA) suppressed a poll predicting victory of President Rajapaksa?
A: There were two incidents. The first incident, a website put up a survey saying that the President is winning. They had put it with the CPA logo and name. the second incident was a State newspaper saying that we have suppressed results of the survey that we have done which showed the President is winning. So one day we are publishing it and then we are suppressing it. It was like the left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing.
By using our name and logo, they are trying to give validity to some altered text. By putting up results of such polls, they are trying to discourage people from going to the polling station. Such acts are done due to desperation. This is all part of a political and electoral hoax in which various parties engage.
A: There were two incidents. The first incident, a website put up a survey saying that the President is winning. They had put it with the CPA logo and name. the second incident was a State newspaper saying that we have suppressed results of the survey that we have done which showed the President is winning. So one day we are publishing it and then we are suppressing it. It was like the left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing.
By using our name and logo, they are trying to give validity to some altered text. By putting up results of such polls, they are trying to discourage people from going to the polling station. Such acts are done due to desperation. This is all part of a political and electoral hoax in which various parties engage.
Letter To The Sri Lankan Nation
Dear Sri Lankan Citizen,
I know this is the eleventh hour, maybe too late to write this, for you will be heading to the polls that determine our nation’s future in a few hours. I am no fan of politics, particularly Sri Lankan. Even though I am a Sri Lankan we cannot exercise our franchise, as we live away from our motherland, millions of us, professionals to domestic workers, all over the globe. We are earning mighty dollars and dinars that are essential to maintain our beloved nation.
Today, our motherland is besieged by a regime, a dictator we haven’t seen since the brutal Kandyan kings. We are stripped of our privileges even though we sweat for our country, far away from loved ones in strange, hostile lands, our hard earned money to be siphoned away by the regime and its henchmen via exorbitant taxes, leading to ever increased cost of living.
We are the drivers of the nation’s economy over the last two decades, yet we do not have our basic right, right to vote, for being in a foreign land. You are living in this land, you have the opportunity to exercise your franchise within the next few hours, a right that is denied to us.
Dear citizen, fear is a terrible thing, hopelessness is an even more terrible thing to occur. These are the conditions we are living under, fear and hopelessness. That’s the tragedy we have to overcome at this eleventh hour.
We have overcome natural disasters, three wars within forty years, terrorism, famine, death and destruction thrust upon us. Now we have to confront our worst enemy, fear, and we must overcome this, no matter how difficult. As a nation we have overcame all manner of obstacles over 2500 years, which we are proud of. There is nothing much to show today about that great history, except perhaps our resilience.
Ironically, today we stand united, as a nation. We have united Tamils, Muslims and Burghers alike at a common front. This is our time for redemption from fear and mental slavery, this is our time for reconciliation, this is our time to build hope and a just society that we were longing for, for so many years.
As a nation we have produced great intellectuals, professionals, and many great human beings, who are still contributing to the advancement of humanity around the world. Wherever I go, I see a Sri Lankan working in many a field, a heart warming sight, a testament to our capacity to adapt, conquer and succeed. We are a nation, a symbol of resilience.
Dear Sri Lankan citizen, we have been given many things that we are grateful for. We have enjoyed free health care, free education and a relatively free judiciary and rule of law, which are the barometers of a just society. However, these institutions were raped, destroyed and robbed during the last five years by goons, thugs, miscreants and lumpens who must be locked away from humanity. You chose them to rule you, and this is your time to chase them away for good, and bring this beautiful country and its people back on the right path.
You have to overcome the fear of uncertainty in order to achieve this. Anxiety and fear must be defeated. Let hope triumph over fear, that’s how we can redeem ourselves from the sins we have committed in the past.
I wish you luck at this eleventh hour.
Dr.Dhammika Herath – Australia
Travel bans on military officers who obey moron Gota’s illegal orders ? Gen. Fonseka’s special announcement hereunder

(Lanka-e-News- 06.Jan.2015, 8.00PM) The Medamulana Rajapakse family regime that has become cock sure of defeat at the upcoming Presidential elections is in its utter desperation weaving all kinds of tales. While publicly blabbering that Rajapakse is going to win by hook or by crook it is conveying to the military chiefs that , whether it wins or loses , Mahinda Rajapakse is going to continue as the commander in chief of the forces. Meanwhile , it has come to light that the family regime in its disastrous circumstances is engaging in a number of suspicious and obnoxious activities to capture power via military methods.
It is also evident that a handful of military chiefs who are in fear that if the Rajapakses lose , they will also lose their positions are deeply in their toils giving sly and illicit support to the deflated and disappointed Rajapakses.
It is only when emergency laws are in operation , the military forces can be enlisted to ensure peace and order in the country, if not, it is only the police force that can be in charge of the country’s security. Besides , only if the situation is most grave that a police officer of a rank higher than an SP who could seek military assistance to establish law and order in the country .
Hence , when emergency laws are not in operation , summoning the military forces for election activities is absolutely illegal. While this is the sacrosanct legal position , it is reported that preparations are afoot to detail military security for the area where the Elections commissioner’s office is situated. This security detail has been entrusted to a most notorious Special force Brigadier Nilmal Dharmaratne.
Truly speaking , this brigadier is one who based on his putrid antecedence deserves to be booted out from the forces . This scoundrel of a brigadier while he was in America undergoing training for which payment was made out of people’s funds , stabbed his own brother in law , and had to face a jail term in that country thereby soiling the country’s image. The Rajapakses who are infamously famous for following their favorite theory of using individuals with such indelible stigma tic experiences and putrid antecedence as their stooges to do all their sordid and illegal biddings had found in this brigadier Nilmal Dharmaratne the satanic character they are looking for. Hence , the Rajapakses have utilized him for these suspicion ridden activities during elections.
It is also noteworthy that a group of officers who belonged to the team that laid siege to the hotel in Colombo at the last Presidential elections where the opposition leaders was staying , are holding secret discussions today (05) at the Seeduwa special force headquarters. The headquarters chief , Jagath Dias , Special force Brigade commander Harindra Ranasinghe , and a retired chief of the forces, Prassanna Wickremesinghe ( Rajapakse relative and brother of former US Ambassador Jaliya Wickremesinghe) have taken part in this discussion. Introducing about 400 road blocks in Colombo on 8 th night has been discussed at this meeting.
Based on informed diplomatic sources , a powerful country of Asia along with western and European countries have decided to impose a travel ban on those military chiefs after identifying them who are acting on the illegal instructions of the Rajapakses , who are seeking to obstruct the democratic right to franchise of the people .While the people in unprecedented numbers are rallying around the common opposition led by its presidential candidate Maithripala Sirisena , if the few lackeys and lickspittles of Gota are to act disregarding the wishes of the people who are in a great majority , it is absolutely doubtless these Lilliputians are going to learn a lesson of their lifetime.
The former army commander , the four star general Sarath Fonseka at a media briefing yesterday(05) , that is ,on the last day of election propaganda activities made a special announcement to the forces and the nation . He said , he will never betray the country which he rescued after shedding his blood , tears and sweat . Like how he promised that he would not keep the war unfinished for another commander to end it , he honored his promise by concluding it victoriously for the country .
He also reminded the forces and the nation that as he promised that Prabhakaran will not be allowed to make a speech again on his ‘great heroes’ day, ’ so he did it.
He also bemoaned that the soldiers have been disgraced by making them to cut bricks , clean drains , and sell vegetables . He promised that he would see to it their former prestige and honor are restored .
Not a single member of the forces will be hauled up in an international court ,he assured , while warning the people and the forces to guard against being duped by the claptraps and empty rhetoric of the present rulers.
The speech made in Sinhala by Gen. Fonseka is appended
Sri Lanka: In Predicting Presidential Elections?
( January 6, 2015, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) In predicting the upcoming presidential elections, there are no regular opinion polls conducted in Sri Lanka, like for example in Australia. In Australia, which is a compulsory voting country, before we went to the polling booth last time, on 7 September 2013, we roughly knew through these polling predictions that the Labor would lose and the Liberals would win at the national parliamentary elections. As I have expressed in analyzing those results and predictions, it is possible that some voters must have been influenced by these predictions at least marginally. Thank God, we don’t have them in Sri Lanka. In my opinion, these opinion polls should stop at least a week before an election, or otherwise free and fair elections might be indirectly influenced, even in an advanced country like Australia.
Sri Lanka: Human rights at risk as violence surges ahead of presidential election
6 January 2015Amidst a surge in election-related harassment and violence ahead of the 8 January presidential poll, Sri Lankan authorities must ensure that people’s right to political participation is respected, Amnesty International said.
“The growing harassment and violence against those campaigning in the coming elections is deeply troubling – the authorities have a responsibility to ensure that all people in Sri Lanka can exercise their rights to political participation and freedom of expression without facing threats or violence, and that on election day they can vote without fear,” said David Griffiths, Amnesty International’s Deputy Asia Pacific Director.
“Reports of a potential organized plan to obstruct voters on election day – allegedly orchestrated by the government through the military – is also a matter of grave concern.”
Campaigning for the presidential elections has been marked by intimidation and violence, targeting mainly opposition supporters. In some of the latest incidents on 5 January 2015, three opposition activists were shot and wounded by unidentified gunmen in the southern town of Kahawatte, while two prominent civil society activists found severed heads of dogs outside their homes.
As of 6 January, the independent Centre for Monitoring Election Violence had recorded at least 237 “major incidents” during the campaigning period, including dozens of cases of assaults, intimidation or damage to property. Opposition leaders have also accused the government of planning to use the military to block people from voting in several regions across the country.
Human rights agenda
Ahead of the election, Amnesty International has published a human rights agenda outlining seven key issues the next administration should prioritise. These include the repeal of the 18th constitutional amendment and the repressive Prevention of Terrorism Act; removing restrictions on freedom of expression and association; and ending attacks on religious minorities.
“More than five years after the conflict’s end, human rights violations are still endemic in Sri Lanka. The new administration should make a priority of tackling entrenched concerns – the elections are a chance that must not be missed to turn the corner on human rights,” said David Griffiths.
Our Duty; For All Sri Lankans Living Outside Sri Lanka

By Chinthaka de Silva -
Less than 24 hours to go to bring about the change that whole of Sri Lanka needs with a new political culture that can represent all communities in an equitable and just society be it; Sinhala, Tamil, Muslim, Malay and Burgers. 8th of January 2015, two years before the due date of the presidential election, all Sri Lankans are presented with the opportunity to reverse the current political culture rampant with all misdeeds.
As you may be aware Sri Lanka is the oldest democracy in South Asia. Through the “donoughmore commission” in 1931, it enables the general elections. Sri Lanka was the first nonwhite country within empires of Western Europe, which was one man, one vote and power to control domestic affairs.
Today we have a duty to educate our friends and family who lives in Sri Lanka to use their voting power on the 8th of January 2015 (Thursday) for a true change. Sri Lankans living abroad are better informed and should use this opportunity to inform your friends and family back home.
Today our parents, family members and friends have fallen to dire economic hardships, our brothers and sister’s education system has failed up to university education. This is the only opportunity to exercise their voting right intelligently and to bring about the change our mother Lanka needs. If we failed to do so Sri Lanka will fall under a dictator for the foreseeable future.
Just to remind you the lost opportunity of this current regime to address the grievances of the masses on their fundament societal needs; food, health, and education and to manage the cost of living. What they address was mega projects of white elephants to the society. Burdening with more borrowings and increase taxes on the basic household necessities, to recover and service the debts of current regime borrowings. Today the rule of law is broken down by nepotism and family rule rampant with corruption all over Sri Lanka.
Sri Lanka has a long-standing history of international engagements with United Nations, Commonwealth of Nations, G77, non-align movement and SAARC. Today as a country we are isolated from international community for contradictory actions by the current regime in UN and with Western states.
Very recently this regime failed to send a team of expert to contest and mitigate the lifting of LTTE ban by European courts. This regime was quick to put the blame on the opposition leader and within hours of the court ruling all mud posters island wide went up directing blame on the opposition leadership due to inaction from the regime.
We must ask the President, why he did not intervene in the European Union case as the Sri Lankan government did not come forward even though the Opposition leader was in possession of a copy of the case file? This issue was raised on 27th October 2014 by Mr. Ranil Wickremesinghe to-date this regime has failed to inform the public why they failed to take action.
In order to gain the respect of the international engagement and to restore democracy we need this change with a new political culture by moving out of party politics.
No democracy is perfect and there are honest and rouge politicians everywhere. If you ignore to vote or casting a protest vote only relinquishes control to current regime. On average, these protest votes have the potential to change, I especially urge all parties under the Democratic National Front not to waste this opportunity to make a vital change due to indifference or pessimism.
Once again for all Sri Lankans living elsewhere, it is our duty to inform all Sri Lankans friends and family to use their vote intelligently. The gift of democracy has the right to be chosen by the people, for the people, to the people. All citizens right to vote should respect the gift of democracy and this will be the last chance of your basic right and to unite Sri Lanka after the civil war in a true sense.
Spectre of Violence Hangs Over Sri Lanka Polls

Violence in the lead-up to the Jan. 8 presidential election in Sri Lanka has poll monitors on edge. Credit: Amantha Perera/IPS
By Amantha Perera-Wednesday, January 7, 2015
COLOMBO, Jan 6 2015 (IPS) - As 14.5 million Sri Lankans prepare to select their next leader, there is growing fear that violence could mar the Jan. 8 elections, billed as the closest electoral contest in the island’s history.
Election monitors were worried that as incumbent President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his rival Maithripala Sirisena wound down their campaigns on Jan. 5, violence would scare off voters.
Keerthi Tennakoon, executive director of the national election monitoring body Campaign for Free and Fair Elections (CaFFE), observed that a worrying precedent has been set by police who have by and large remained inactive against violations of election laws, especially those perpetrated by government supporters including at least two parliamentarians.
“The police always appear to be late on the uptake when decisive action by law enforcement can be the most effective deterrent [to violence],” he told IPS.
He pointed to recent clashes in Kahawatta, a town in the central Ratnapura District, as an example. In the early hours of the morning on Jan. 5, while a group of opposition supporters were busy setting up the stage for a rally by common opposition candidate Sirisena in the town’s public grounds, a band of government supporters arrived in eight vehicles and began attacking them.
Rather than running away, the opposition group retaliated. The situation escalated, and shots were fired. Three opposition supporters were injured, and one was rushed to the hospital in critical condition.
Enraged, the opposition supporters launched a retaliatory attack on election offices set up by government followers. The main roads of the town were blocked for at least four hours while the mayhem unfolded.
“Police [did not] take any action until two hours after the initial incident,” CaFFE noted in an update. “They only reacted when the [opposition] United National Party (UNP) supporters started attacking [Deputy Minister Premalal] Jayasekara’s offices,” the monitoring body added.
A couple of hours earlier, another group of government supporters loyal to a deputy minister assaulted officials from the election commissioner’s department in the eastern town of Trincomalee after they had gone to investigate a digital screen in a public space relaying election propaganda.
The attack took place despite the officials being provided security by nine policemen.
“The last 48 hours before the election are crucial; ordinary voters will not want to risk being assaulted, or worse, if they feel that there is such a risk,” Tennakoon said.
Voting for equality?
The elections have been billed as one of closet in recent history. President Rajapaksa, who called elections two years before they were due, is facing a stiff challenge in the form of his one-time health minister Sirisena.
The run-up to the election has been dominated by personal attacks against the top contenders, and has remained largely empty of policy discussions.
Despite robust growth, Sri Lanka still faces vast economic disparities. The richest 20 percent of the population enjoys half of all national income, while the poorest 20 percent has access to just five percent of the country’s wealth.
According to the latest Household Income Survey by the government’s Department of Census and Statistics, the monthly income of the poorest 20 percent of the population was 10, 245 rupees (about 78 dollars), while the richest 20 percent earned a monthly income of 121,368 rupees (about 933 dollars).
Furthermore, the war-ravaged North is mired in poverty despite the civil war ending in May 2009.
Anushka Wijesinha, an economist and policy advisor, observed that the election manifestos are full of promises relating to public spending and low on strategic policies that would ensure long-term stability.
“Unsurprisingly, both manifestos are populist and full of public spending goodies – from welfare handouts to public sector salary hikes. These will boost short-term consumption, and are unlikely to be inflationary as recent inflation has been low. But the spending will hurt the fiscal consolidation efforts of the past few years and public finances may come under increased pressure,” he said.
The elections are likely to create economic uncertainty at least in the short term and will in all likelihood be followed by parliamentary elections. A day after elections were announced on Nov. 20, the Colombo Stock Market recorded its worst slide in over 15 months, and has remained sluggish ever since.
“Both [leading candidates] have a heavy emphasis on state-led initiatives and taxpayer-funded programmes, which in the past have been notoriously inefficient. Instead, focus of policies should be on making it easier for private sector entrepreneurship and innovation to thrive,” Wijesinha asserted.
The election has also seen a crumbling of the broad-based support President Rajapaksa enjoyed in Sri Lanka’s parliament since the war’s end.
Since late 2010, the President has had a two-thirds majority in the 225-member parliament. But a little over a month after elections were called on Nov. 20, 26 members from the government’s camp have crossed over to the opposition.
The Sirisena campaign has also gained the support of parties representing Muslim and Tamil minorities, who together comprise some 15 percent of the country’s population of 21 million.
There has been some attention paid to issues of importance to the minorities, especially development in the Northern Province.
President Rajapaksa campaigned in the North twice and pledged to revitalise the economy and create jobs.
Still, the unemployment rate in the Northern Province is stubbornly high at 5.2 percent, well above the national rate of 4.4 percent and the third highest in the country.
The island’s highest unemployment rate of 7.9 percent was recorded in the Kilinochchi District last year, according to government statistics. Poverty is also rampant in the North, with four of the five districts that make up the province registering rates higher than the national poverty rate of 6.7 percent.
But Muttukrishna Sarvananthan, who heads the Point Pedro Institute of Development based in northern Jaffna, told IPS that if the Northern economy is to regain momentum, more private investment needed to be channeled in.
“I would argue that more private capital investment that could generate a large number of [jobs] is the critical need, rather than foreign aid,” he said, pointing out that policies needed to be formulated with long-term stability in mind.
He also feels that decentralising power could help address political as well as economic grievances. “Fiscal devolution to the provinces should be undertaken immediately to provide the necessary financial resources for the provinces (including the Eastern and Northern Provinces) to operate independently and effectively without interference from the national government,” he stated.
Power devolution has been a critical demand of minority Tamil groups throughout the island’s post-independence history. In fact, the lack of political power was a major catalyst for the growth of separatism and the rise of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), which waged a protracted battle for an independent ‘homeland’ for the Tamil people from 1983 until 2009.
However, Ponnadurai Balasundarampillai, former Vice Chancellor of the Jaffna University, told IPS that power devolution would be a tricky subject for any administration.
“If it is a new president, he will have to take stock of the situation. The incumbent presidency has already shown that it favours a more centralised form of governance and administration,” he said.
Edited by Kanya D’Almeida
The inevitability of change
Even a cursory reading of the ‘Mahinda Chinthana – Path to Success’ bears out in no uncertain terms the recognition of that basic unchallengeable fact that ‘change is inevitable’. The manifesto is full of a variety of changes that the ruling incumbent President promises to bring to fruition.
#IVotedSL infographic: How to vote

Voting is an important civic responsibility and one way all of us exercise and enjoy our Sovereignty. This responsibility becomes particularly important during a Presidential Election, because of the immense power vested in this office.
With just a few days more for the 2015 Presidential Election, follow and support #IVotedSL, a trilingual campaign launched by Centre for Monitoring Election Violence (CMEV) to encourage citizens to exercise their right to franchise.
This infographic explains how to cast your vote and what you should avoid doing to have it rejected.
Letter To Lt. Gen. Daya Ratnayake, The Army Commander Of Sri Lanka
“When dictatorship is a fact, revolution becomes a right” – Victor Hugo
Dear Sir,
It is no more a secret now your involvement in politics on behalf of PresidentMahinda Rajapaksa (MR) whilst serving as the army commander. While I understand your plight should a new government comes to power, in the best interests of my country and my countrymen, I decided to write to you and to create a sense of awareness among the public of an impending human catastrophe should you continue to operate beyond acceptable norms.
Browsing through the SL army’s webpage, I couldn’t help but notice you spending more time in conference and seminar rooms than you actually had spent in the battlefield. Assuming you have a conscience to uphold the rule of law, thought it would also be timely to remind you of your recent ‘errors in judgment’ and hope you would respond to the following observations,
1 – Your failure to implicate or investigate Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Mr. Basil Rajapaksa for their involvement in giving Rs. 700 million to the LTTE in 2005 as alleged by the late Sripathy Sooriyarachi;
And by Mr. Tiran Alles
2 – Your failure to defend your own kind and the only 4-star General in the country from malicious prosecution and cooked-up charges while portraying yourself as a ‘Brave heart’ in the eyes of pseudo-nationalists when confronted by the International Community.Read More
Challenges Ahead: Sri Lanka's mass atrocities and international justice
“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”- Edmund Burke
BY NIRMANUSAN BALASUNDARAM-06 JANUARY 2015
Sri Lanka, a country currently under international scrutiny for its violation of international humanitarian law and human rights law during the final phase of the war in Mullivaaikaal in the country’s north, is preparing for its seventh presidential election scheduled to be held on 8 January 2015.
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